NOFX - Six years on dope

23. Juli 2016

NOFX

First track off of NOFX’s brand new album, First Ditch Effort. Out October 7th.

Let’s be real: What’s really left to say about NOFX? For over thirty years the
reigning kings of punk rock have remained relevant by continuing to push the boundaries of their music, lyrics and good taste in a way that’s as endearing as it is infectious.

First Ditch Effort

For that reason it’s remarkably apt that the band’s latest LP First Ditch Effort is also their thirteenth because ominous black clouds hang over this collection of songs that see
frontman/bassist Fat Mike exploring self-loathing and mortality in a more raw and honest way than he ever has before. Mike credits much of this to the writing process behind NOFX: The
Hepatitis Bathtub And Other Stories, the band’s New York Times Bestselling memoir that forced him to confront his ghosts and revisit his past in ways that weren’t always comfortable.

“This album is more personal than anything I’ve ever done before because once we put everything out there in the book it opened all of these doors are far as what I want to sing about” Fat
Mike explains. However this wouldn’t sound like a NOFX album without powerful performances from guitarists Eric Melvin and El Hefe as well as drummer, Smelly. In that spirit this album also marks
the first time that Melvin helped write songs and his contributions to “It Ain’t So Lonely At The Bottom” and “I Don’t Like Me Anymore” as well as his signature vocals on the opener “Six Years On
Dope” add a visceral impact to these songs that will surprise even the band’s most hardcore fans. “It’s like you don’t expect it, what the fuck?” Mike says of the aforementioned opener. “That
song reminds me of the Angry Samoans meeting the Bronx and I don’t think there’s anything that sounds like it.”

Despite the fact that NOFX helped invent melodic punk music (alongside their longtime peers such as Bad Religion and Rancid), they’ve never made
the same album twice and First Ditch Effort sees them continuing to push their own musical boundaries. “One of the things I’m proud of on this album is the song ‘California Drought’ because
it’s written in a rhythm that I don’t think anyone has ever used before and we have a drum solo on that song,” he explains as if he can’t even believe it himself. Fat Mike also adds that
spending the past few years working on his musical Home Street Home helped subconsciously
influence this album, whether it’s via the fully formed harmonies or prevalence of piano. “I’ve written so many crazy songs for the musical that even though NOFX didn’t have a mold I keep
pushing barriers,” he responds when asked why this album sounds so inspired.

Fat Mike also credits producer Cameron Webb (Motörhead, Alkaline Trio) for helping make these songs so dynamic. “Cameron had a lot of ideas that I would have never have
thought of when it came to arrangements,” he explains. In fact the band were so inspired that they wrote eighteen songs for the album and even came up with some ideas when they weren’t even
trying. “The song ‘Ditch Effort’ just came out of nowhere from us jamming,” Fat Mike recalls. “That’s not a normal thing for us but we just started playing and it had so much power
and it felt so good to play it together so we had to put it on the album.” The band also prove that they haven’t lost their innate ability to craft a hook on First Ditch
Effort and the conspiracy theory-rich “Sid And Nancy” and self-reflective rocker “I Don’t Like Me Anymore” are two of the band’s catchiest tracks to date.

However ultimately seriousness and somberness also lie at the core of First Ditch Effort, a fact that’s most evident in Mike’s musical eulogy to No Use For A Name’s frontman
Tony Sly (“I’m So Sorry Tony”) as well the apocalyptic closer “Generation Z” which features guest vocals from Mike’s 11-year-old daughter Darla who will also be producing the
subsequent music video. “A lot of people are going to look at me differently after hearing this album,” Mike explains. “I think I was more comfortable about being myself on this record
and a large part of that is due to my relationship with my wife and involvement in the BDSMworld. “I used to live so much of my life in private but I’ve slowly started going to parties and
out in public without being embarrassed of my true identity and that confidence just transferred over to my entire life,” he continues. “When you’re dressed in rubber and heels and corset and
you’re waiting in line for an Omelette in Jamaica, well, after that there’s nowhere else to go.”

After battling skinhead punks in the eighties, major-label executives in the nineties and George W. Bush in the early 2000s, NOFX are finally ready to enjoy the
success they’ve been too preoccupied to embrace in the past… and it’s turning out to be pretty exciting. “I went out with El Hefe the other night to a party and I think it was the first time
we had ever hung out socially and it was a ton of fun,” Fat Mike recalls. “I think the process of doing the book and the book tour and making this record has brought the four of us
together and formed a bond that we never would have discovered otherwise,” he summarizes. That newfound revelation is inherent in even some of this First Ditch Effort’s darkest moments
making it the perfect soundtrack to both a fresh start as well as the end of the world. As the band have undeniably learned over the past 33 years, sometimes it’s just all about your perspective.